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Why would you hide the pricing from your website?


Good question! We didn’t mean to hide the pricing. The reason we left it off originally is that app stores adjust prices by country, and we didn’t want to confuse people by listing just the US price or trying to maintain a huge list of 150+ regional prices. That said, we get that having a ballpark is better than nothing, so we’ve now added the US pricing to the site.


Doprax.com is built on top of hetzner/digitalocean/ovh/vultr and has nice auto-deploy functions from github ! And accepts lots of payments options



does that with any phone, or just any tablet? It would be interesting to use old phones for media control or something


Any phone, tablet, fridge, toaster, ... that can run a vnc app.


I actually achieved the same, with benefits.

The hack is here: https://github.com/any1/wayvnc/issues/7#issuecomment-6570922...

Benefits are: two way interaction :)


Location: France

Remote: Prefered, but open to propositions

Willing to relocate: Open to propositions

Technologies: Python, Node, C(++), Ruby, Docker, k8s, Chef,

Terraform, OpenStack, Linux, CI/CD

Résumé/CV: Available upon request

Email: saddok (-dot-) ma (-at-) gmail (-dot-) com


I actually have this one :

javascript:(function () { document.designMode == 'on' ? document.designMode = 'off' : document.designMode = 'on';})()


Just so you know, the immediately-invoked function expression (IIFE) syntax is unnecessary here. This would do:

  javascript:document.designMode=document.designMode=='on'?'off':'on'


Doesn't seem to work in chrome. Clicking it just sends you to a page that says "on"


This works for me in Chrome and Firefox, and is a bit shorter than the others (excluding your parent).

javascript:(function () {document.designMode=document.designMode=='on'?'off':'on';})()


You could host them on some peertube instance

https://joinpeertube.org/en/#register


Nice, china is glad to hear that


china has no problem destructively reverse engineering chips. they aren't validating them, they are copying them. and the destructive method may be time consuming, but surely for China it's cheaper?

this technique would be more like CMM validation of a part after manufacturing. very, very useful but with a different goal in mind.


Plus aren't many chips made in China? My impression after watching BigClive tear apart stuff was that a lot of Chinese clones use their own chips, and many chips are custom and seem to only exist between Chinese manufacturers (like custom USB charging chips, led chips for flashlights, etc.)


In order to manufacture these chips you need the schematics. It's the same thing as having the source code and the deployment/compilation instructions: You don't need anything else.


Strictly speaking, for manufacturing you need the layout for the chip, but extracting a schematic from a given layout is an automated process and used for verification. You create a layout from a given schematic and later check, whether the layout implements that schematic.


Physical Unclonable Functions were supposed to address this.

I wouldn't expect them to hold a state actor at bay for more than a little while, but at least with a PUF in place overproduction isn't as simple as "just make more."


And one should not overlook that a lot of cutting edge chip design is done in China. Just think of all the chips by Huawei. On top of that, the direct layout information is more relevant for reengineering than copying.


The CPU/GPU architecture is still done by ARM for those.


Yes, they are using ARM IPs, like many other companies. But still, designing a complex 7nm SOC is quite a feat.


Clinigrid | http://www.clinigrid.com | Paris, France | Onsite | full time

We do software that collect health data, integrate it, exploit it.

We're currently have open positions for two Senior Java developers.

Our stack is primarily Spring/Wicket with a lot of internal libraries developed internally over the time.

You'll join a small team in Paris (Champs-Elysées) devoted to make good software for health care sector in France and abroad.


I think, with my miserable knowledge of NewRelic, that NR is only for application monitoring. Not for system too, as this project.


New Relic absolutely does system monitoring. It's gonna cost you, however...


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